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Indigenous people from Canada, U.S., meet in Saskatoon to sign treaty aiming to restore bison

Indigenous people from Canada, U.S., meet in Saskatoon to sign treaty aiming to restore bison

CBC
Sunday, July 17, 2022 06:37:46 AM UTC

Indigenous people from both sides of the Canada-U.S. border came together at Wanuskewin Heritage Park in Saskatoon on Friday to witness the signing of the buffalo treaty.

The first signatories to the treaty — members of different nations in North America — put their names on the document in 2014 at the Blackfeet Reservation in Montana, with the goal of allowing the free flow of the animals across the international border and restoring the spiritual and cultural connections between bison and Indigenous peoples.

"The buffalo treaty is all about bringing that buffalo back," said Leroy Little Bear, a member of the International Buffalo Relations Institute and a leading force behind the treaty.

"The buffalo is [a] very important part of our lives, our culture and so on. The buffalo is … related to us through our songs, through our stories, through our ceremonies."

Representatives of the Battlefords Agency Tribal Chiefs and Nekaneet First Nation in Saskatchewan, as well as the Louis Bull Tribe in Alberta, joined the treaty as new signatories on Friday.

Witnesses, supporters and other partners also signed the agreement, including Wanuskewin Heritage Park, which reaffirmed its commitment to the treaty. The park is home to a herd of 24 bison.

Bison were returned to the park in 2019 following years-long efforts to return bison to the site.

Sylvia Weenie, chief of Stoney Knoll First Nation and a representative of the Battlefords Agency Tribal Chiefs, is glad to see that.

"Bringing the buffalo back, and the revitalization of the knowledge between the buffalo and the connection with our culture and our children, I think it's a really good, positive step for my grandchildren — my future grandchildren as well," she said.

"This is one of the things that I would really like to see all of our nations participate [in]."

The seven First Nations that are members of the Battlefords agency will have a buffalo treaty signing event in August at Sweetgrass First Nation, she said.

While the pandemic slowed the process of communities joining the agreement, more First Nations are now coming together again to sign the treaty, said Little Bear, who is a member of the Kainai Tribe of the Blackfoot Confederacy in Alberta.

"Our brother, the buffalo, is an eco-engineer — it brings about ecological balances on the land," he said.

"Anywhere we can see buffalo roaming around freely as they used to be … we're moving forward with our goals and our objectives."

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